Brain structural connectome in neonates with prenatal opioid exposure

Author:

Vishnubhotla Ramana V.,Zhao Yi,Wen Qiuting,Dietrich Jonathan,Sokol Gregory M.,Sadhasivam Senthilkumar,Radhakrishnan Rupa

Abstract

IntroductionInfants with prenatal opioid exposure (POE) are shown to be at risk for poor long-term neurobehavioral and cognitive outcomes. Early detection of brain developmental alterations on neuroimaging could help in understanding the effect of opioids on the developing brain. Recent studies have shown altered brain functional network connectivity through the application of graph theoretical modeling, in infants with POE. In this study, we assess global brain structural connectivity through diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) metrics and apply graph theoretical modeling to brain structural connectivity in infants with POE.MethodsIn this prospective observational study in infants with POE and control infants, brain MRI including DTI was performed before completion of 3 months corrected postmenstrual age. Tractography was performed on the whole brain using a deterministic fiber tracking algorithm. Pairwise connectivity and network measure were calculated based on fiber count and fractional anisotropy (FA) values. Graph theoretical metrics were also derived.ResultsThere were 11 POE and 18 unexposed infants included in the analysis. Pairwise connectivity based on fiber count showed alterations in 32 connections. Pairwise connectivity based on FA values showed alterations in 24 connections. Connections between the right superior frontal gyrus and right paracentral lobule and between the right superior occipital gyrus and right fusiform gyrus were significantly different after adjusting for multiple comparisons between POE infants and unexposed controls. Additionally, alterations in graph theoretical network metrics were identified with fiber count and FA value derived tracts.ConclusionComparisons show significant differences in fiber count in two structural connections. The long-term clinical outcomes related to these findings may be assessed in longitudinal follow-up studies.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

General Neuroscience

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